Great Wall Institute: The Process of the Great Wall of Los Angeles

1960s Subculture of Black Solidarity at San Quentin - NOI - Nation of Islam

1958 - guards were injured during a riot at the Deuel Youth Prison, east of Oakland. Authorities transported the instigators to San Quentin Prison. One of the involved juveniles was LA gang member and armed robber - James Carr. A prison revolutionary, George Jackson, formed a friendship with Carr. Quentin, as anticipated by Carr, was violent - day after day of relentless combat with guards and prisoners. There was however a subculture  of Black Solidarity - The Nation of Islam (NOI)

Booker North Was the most important Muslim leader in San Quentin - converting 10 to 15 inmates to Islams. Guards egged on white suprematists in the prison yard to attack Booker. They did and when he fought back, the guards shot and killed him. His following continued the work - fighting for the right to hold prayer meetings, have Muslim visitors, receive religious publications and keep the Koran in their cells. 

It was a new practice in prison that police had to grapple with. Inside prisons, they were "miracle workers, arbitrating conflicts between Black inmates, promoting literacy and Koran study, and above all organizing disciplined resistance to degrading routines and brutal treatment... they were seen as family builders and exemplars of a self-help ehthos that they believed would someday be the foundation of a new nation."-  Mike Davis

Malcolm X - helped to organize temples - Temple No. 27 in South Central Los Angeles "Malcom's Temple" as it was called. He was keen to establish a strong NOI base in Los Angeles. He preached at Normandie Hall. He acquainted himself with major Afrocentric institutions:

Pyramid Cooperative Grocery,
Alfred Ligon's Aquarian Book Shop,
Adel Young's Hugh Gordon Bookshop,
the Weekly Herald- dispatch owned by Sanford and Pat Alexander - 
he apprenticed here to learn as much as possible about newspaper publishing 

"Pat was a fabulist and demagogue who used the paper as a megaphone for hallucinatory claims about Jewish conspiracies against Black people... But the Herald-Dispatch, even if more extreme than the NOI in its anti-Semitism, was otherwise a good fit for the ideas of Elijah Muhammad."- Mike Davis

The paper began to publish and syndicate weekly columns from both Muhammad and Malcolm - Malcolm's column was called "God's Angry men"... - Set the Night on Fire LA in the Sixties Mike Davis and Jon Wiener























 

This page has paths:

This page has tags: